Glucagon infusion alters the circulating metabolome and urine amino acid excretion in dogs

Author:

Merkhassine Michael12,Coch Reilly W13,Frederick Carol E1,Bennett Lucinda L1,Peng Seth A14,Morse Benjamin1,Cummings Bethany P56,Loftus John P1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Loftus Laboratory, Department of Clinical Sciences, Cornell University, College of Veterinary Medicine, Ithaca, New York, USA

2. VCA Colonial Animal Hospital, Ithaca, New York, USA

3. Weill Cornell College of Medicine, New York, New York, USA

4. Fate Therapeutics, San Diego, California, USA

5. Center for Alimentary and Metabolic Science, Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, University of California, Davis, Sacramento, California, USA

6. Department of Molecular Biosciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USA

Abstract

Glucagon plays a central role in amino acid (AA) homeostasis. The dog is an established model of glucagon biology, and recently, metabolomic changes in people associated with glucagon infusions have been reported. Glucagon also has effects on the kidney; however, changes in urinary AA concentrations associated with glucagon remain under investigation. Therefore, we aimed to fill these gaps in the canine model by determining the effects of glucagon on the canine plasma metabolome and measuring urine AA concentrations. Employing two constant rate glucagon infusions (CRI) – low-dose (CRI-LO: 3 ng/kg/min) and high-dose (CRI-HI: 50 ng/kg/min) on five research beagles, we monitored interstitial glucose and conducted untargeted liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) on plasma samples and urine AA concentrations collected pre- and post-infusion. The CRI-HI induced a transient glucose peak (90–120 min), returning near baseline by infusion end, while only the CRI-LO resulted in 372 significantly altered plasma metabolites, primarily reductions (333). Similarly, CRI-HI affected 414 metabolites, with 369 reductions, evidenced by distinct clustering post-infusion via data reduction (PCA and sPLS-DA). CRI-HI notably decreased circulating AA levels, impacting various AA-related and energy-generating metabolic pathways. Urine analysis revealed increased 3-methyl-l-histidine and glutamine, and decreased alanine concentrations post-infusion. These findings demonstrate glucagon’s glucose-independent modulation of the canine plasma metabolome and highlight the dog’s relevance as a translational model for glucagon biology. Understanding these effects contributes to managing dysregulated glucagon conditions and informs treatments impacting glucagon homeostasis.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

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